* EU, Germany say Spain faces "troika" monitoring of bank aid * Relief rally over 100 billion euro package fizzles fast * China urges euro zone to take more decisive action * All eyes on Greek election for next test in debt crisis By Sonya Dowsett and Gareth Jones MADRID/BERLIN, June 11 (Reuters) - Financial market euphoria over a European bailout for Spain's debt-stricken banks faded quickly on Monday as investors sounded the alarm over its impact on public debt and bondholders, and eyed the next risks in the euro zone's debt crisis.

When the last of DDB Chicago's Anheuser-Busch business dried up after the Super Bowl in February, the ad agency's new creative director, Ewan Paterson, redeployed his Budweiser creative team to work on a State Farm campaign, and his Bud Light team to work on Skittles and Starburst. The State Farm spots began airing in June, and the new Starburst and Skittles campaigns will hit in January. Barry Burdiak, who headed up the Budweiser creative effort, was eager for the new challenge, said Paterson.

One program knows what to do with an opportunity, the other does not. However you want to write it, that was the story Saturday. Northwestern, a 16-point underdog on the road, walks away with a stunning 17-10 victory over No. 8 Iowa. Notre Dame, a 12 1/2 -point favorite at home, falls apart in a stunning 23-21 loss to Navy. You just know the headlines around the country are going to have the word "shipwrecked" in it. For once, it won't be a cliche. The difference between the two programs?

In a week of thrilling Bulls and Blackhawks playoff action, football stories ring the Web popularity bell. 1. Jessica Kristinovich-Savin: Glencoe man tries to preserve her memory (April 28). Two years ago, the 17-year-old New Trier student fell through a building's skylight to her death. Adding to the sadness, says the story, "The second victim of the tragedy was the teenager's mother, who never got over the loss and died this year ... in a room littered with empty prescription drug bottles."

We know, we know. Staying up all night, even if you're being inundated with entertainment, is a challenge. But your mission, should you choose to accept it, is the first Looptopia. From sunset on Friday until dawn on Saturday, there will be something, often many things, for you to do. Will it be an adventure or a bust? Or will people doing literary readings at 4 a.m. be funnier than the comedians? Far be it for us to say. What we can say is: Here's our guide to Looptopia, with selections from our critics and the On the Town staff.